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Planned DMV closures in Alabama adds urgency to push to restore the Voting Rights Act

This week the state of Alabama, which requires a photo ID to vote, announced that it would be closing driver鈥檚 license offices in 31 locations.

The counties where the offices are to be closed are predominantly black and poor. Although the Secretary of State has said that the offices of the county boards of registrars and a 鈥渕obile voter ID van鈥 can service the population, there can be no argument that these closures are yet another barrier聽to those seeking to exercise their right to聽vote.聽

Following the 2013 Supreme Court ruling in聽Shelby v. Holder, which gutted a key section of the Voting Rights Act, we wrote:听

While 40 percent of the white voting public cast their ballots for a black president nationwide, only 15 percent of white voters did so in Alabama. And as Justice Ginsburg pointed out in her dissent, there are still Alabama legislators who talk openly about suppressing the black vote and refer to black voters as 鈥渁borigines.鈥 Freed by the Supreme Court from the protections for minority voters that Congress envisioned, one can only imagine what these kinds of legislators will think of next.

The closure of these important聽driver鈥檚 license offices is exactly聽what the state thought of next. Alabama can only be this cavalier because we no longer have the strong protections of the VRA鈥攁nd that鈥檚 why we urgently need to restore it.聽